Remarks
The admission is done based on your 12th percentage for bachelor's, and your college aggregate percentage for masters. You will have to fill an application form online on the official website of Lachoo Memorial College, then wait for the merit list. Based on your merit list rank, you will be called for counselling and fill in your preferences. For CBSE board students, if you have a percentage above 60% you can easily get admission to this college. Since LMC is affiliated with Jnvu therefore, the students of the RBSE board are prioritised over Central board students, however, if you have good marks, you will face no difficulty during admission. Seats for PCM, biotechnology are filled fast, so if you have a lower percentage, chances of getting seats in BSc PCM and BSc biotech is low, but you will eventually get admission by the final list.
Course Curriculum Overview
One of the best things about LMCST is its exam patterns. The college follows a strict semester exam pattern, where a student must pass every subject to clear their semester. There are two internals and one end sem exam per semester, which are conducted with a gap of one month. The one month gap is sufficient time to prepare for the exams. Each internals weighs 10 marks, and each end sem paper weighs 80 marks. In case a student gets back in a semester, he/she can apply for re-evaluation which costs 300/- per paper, they can also apply for ATKT exams.
Fees and Financial Aid
In my stream, as far as I know, there were zero campus placement opportunities for BSc students. There were no internships or any projects in my batch of BSc PCM. As for the fees, we had to pay approx Rs 50,000 per year, which keeping in mind the absence of placement opportunities was extremely high from my perspective. If the fee is not an issue for you, then considering LMCST is definitely a good option, however, keep in mind that LMCST is definitely expensive for all the general degrees.
Campus Life
In my first year, we had an intercollege fest called mannat, which was pretty awesome from the perspective of autonomous college, which was conducted by the student council under the student president. However, from my second year onwards elections were cancelled. We didn't have a big fest in my second year, each department got their mini versions of the fest, which felt more like a school annual day rather than a college fest. Because of all the strict norms of LMCST, every single fest was conducted under a set of many rules and regulations, and students had no power whatsoever over them. There weren't many clubs when I took admission, however during my second year, a literature club was created, and they had their own set of fests. One was conducted in the fall, known as hayaat, and another was conducted in the spring called waqif. For sports, we had various tournaments as well as the specified day for sports day.














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